Rushing the Growler

January 27th, 2010

Blackfoot River Brewery: Filling 'em right!

Since I started drinking craft beer, I have loved growlers. A lot of the breweries around Montana do not bottle or can their beer, making growlers the ideal way to sample brews from different places. But there are a lot of other advantages too: sustainability, portability, cheap to fill(sometimes), and they just look cool. The New York Times posted a great article about the growth of growlers in New York, not only at breweries but also at bars, specialty beer shops, and even Whole Foods.

“There’s always the possibility that someone may not fill the growler properly,” said Shane Welch, founder of Sixpoint Craft Ales brewery in Brooklyn, which sells its products in stores in growler form. Most stores and bars run the beer straight from the tap to the bottle. “If you don’t fill it to the top, if you don’t purge the air out of there, when you close the container it will be stale beer,” Mr. Welch said. “You probably have to drink it that night.”

Despite all these great advantages of growlers, I must say, my favorite part is their collectibility. Steffen and I have a growler collection, but it pales in comparison to a few others, mainly a man named Tom in Alabama who has ovet 1000 growlers! Speaking of growlers, it is growler day down at the Blackfoot. Get in before 5 to beat the rush!

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Miles

Miles Anfinson currently lives in Helena, Montana where he was born and raised. A year ago, he graduated from Lewis & Clark College in Portland, where he spent four years tasting and drinking beer in the microbrew mecca of the United States. Aside from drinking beer, he enjoys collecting growlers and has a collection of over 120.

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